sohum
Executive member
Really, some of your comments make me wonder whether you decided to just skip watching the Twenty20 World Cup and still make your arguments as if you analyzed every ball in them.
"No slowing down when in trouble" -- This is again false. When India lost early wickets in the final, they slowed down to recover and then built a base for a late onslaught.
"It's either slog and do well, or slog, lose quick wickets, ..." -- If you watched, you would notice that the two teams competing in the final really didn't do this. Pakistan tried to employ the strategy in the final and they ended up losing.
Do you see a recurring factor here? The teams that played like you expect Twenty20 to be played didn't get the full distance. It seems to me more that teams are having trouble understanding the game dynamics.
"There's simply no skill involved that is present in..." -- Well, there are skills in Twenty20 that are simply not present in Test or ODI cricket.
(1) Talent is not about hitting the ball well into the crowd six times in an over.
(2) Talent is not about scoring the fastest half-century in international cricket (3 balls more than the mathematical minimum)
(3) Talent is not about bowling it in the correct channel every ball in the over.
The problem here is that you are trying to compare different games using the same yardstick. Bowling it in the channel of uncertainty is good in both games, but it is more valuable in a Twenty20. Batsmen can leave it in the Test version, but in Twenty20 batsmen have to be talented enough to do something with it.
"There is no building of an innings" -- This was disproved by India in their last three games. They maintained a run rate of less than 6 in their first 6 overs and yet managed to put up 180+ on the board (except for the final).And there is no skill involved in thrashing and bashing for 20 overs. There is no building of an innings, no long bowling spells, no slowing down when in trouble. It's either slog and do well, or slog, lose quick wickets, then be forced to continue to slog and get bowled out cheaply. There's simply no skill involved that is present with tests or even ODI to a lesser extent.
"No slowing down when in trouble" -- This is again false. When India lost early wickets in the final, they slowed down to recover and then built a base for a late onslaught.
"It's either slog and do well, or slog, lose quick wickets, ..." -- If you watched, you would notice that the two teams competing in the final really didn't do this. Pakistan tried to employ the strategy in the final and they ended up losing.
Do you see a recurring factor here? The teams that played like you expect Twenty20 to be played didn't get the full distance. It seems to me more that teams are having trouble understanding the game dynamics.
"There's simply no skill involved that is present in..." -- Well, there are skills in Twenty20 that are simply not present in Test or ODI cricket.
Well, now you are distinguishing people as "true cricket supporters" or not based on whether they like Test cricket. I think it is possible to be a true cricket supporter without being obsessed with Test cricket. In fact, India, where cricket is considered a religion, easily enjoys more support for ODI cricket.Twenty20 is more fun in your opinion. The majority of true cricket supporters (not ones that only like Twenty20, but those who have been around for longer than this baby form has) enjoy test cricket more than ODI or Twenty20 cricket.
Twenty20 appeals to new supporters of the game who find Test cricket too long. That's their choice.
The bowler of the tournament was Umar Gul (not Afridi, imo) and guess what? He was going for wickets. He quickly found out that wickets were the best way to slow the runs down. A lack of quality bowlers and quality strategies does not mean that you blame Twenty20 cricket for bowler strategies.Bowlers are shut out from Twenty20, they do not bowl for wickets, they can only bowl for economy.
Tests generally have bigger crowds than Twenty20's? That's because Twenty20 never made in on a world stage prior to this tournament. I would be very interested in comparing to this year's turnout for the T20 International between India and Australia to the 3rd day of the infamous Mumbai test match a few years back. I think you would be quite surprised to find the results.Possibly the most short sighted thing I have ever read. Test cricket on Boxing Day draws crowds in excess of 90,000 every year. Tests generally have much bigger crowds than Twenty20's.
Now, the topic is really can the three live together. Manee was playing devil's advocate, I feel. Twenty20 is here to stay but that does not mean Test and ODI's can be bid goodbye. And I have problems with the way you define good. Our current definition of good is based on a team's ability in playing Tests and ODI's. Obviously each of these games require different skillsets--which is how you have England, which is a good test team and a mediocre ODI team. Twenty20 brings new dynamics and new skills and assuming that the teams that were good in the other versions will also be good here is an incorrect assumption on your part.More upsets? That means that good teams can lose, which ruins all skill from good players. If in 20 years Twenty20 is the only form of cricket, what happens to supremely talented batsmen who aren't sloggers? They can't get a game.
I guess you would also claim:As for more talent? That is absolutely one of the most ridiculous things I've heard in my life. It has more power, more slogging. Talent is the ability to stay out there for hours on end, defending and picking the bad balls for runs, saving your team from defeat.
Talent is not taking chances every ball and succeeding half the time.
(1) Talent is not about hitting the ball well into the crowd six times in an over.
(2) Talent is not about scoring the fastest half-century in international cricket (3 balls more than the mathematical minimum)
(3) Talent is not about bowling it in the correct channel every ball in the over.
The problem here is that you are trying to compare different games using the same yardstick. Bowling it in the channel of uncertainty is good in both games, but it is more valuable in a Twenty20. Batsmen can leave it in the Test version, but in Twenty20 batsmen have to be talented enough to do something with it.